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70
Three Score and Ten in Retrospect
Jackson (President of the New England Mission) who invited us to dinner after church. After a good shower we went to another Howard Johnson to eat, then drove around through the most mixed up and crooked streets imaginable. To bed late - the elevator man said it was 98 degrees hot!" Sunday. July 21st: "We went to church at the Cambridge Branch. They have a lovely new building across the street from Longfellow's home. We got so interested in visiting with Junius Jackson that the men missed priesthood. John and I sat on the stand during Sunday School and were introduced. There was a big crowd. We knew several. We went to the mission home for a lovely dinner after church. We had a good visit with the Jacksons and missionaries (16 people there). (Note: One of the missionaries at dinner was George Pingree, Second Counselor of the mission, who later became Carmen's brother-in-law.) The kids loved it. John Bierer (Chairman of the National Cub Scouting Committee whom we had entertained in Salt Lake) took us to Harvard campus, museums (glass flowers), etc., then to Gloucester, a fishing village on the north shore. We had a wonderful day ." Monday, July 22nd: "We took our own personally conducted tour of Boston: Bunker Hill Monument, Paul Revere's home, the State House, the Old North Church (beautiful), and got tied up in traffic. We went on to Plymouth where we saw Plymouth Rock, the original Massasoit statue (copy in front of Utah State Capitol), the cranberry bogs, and took train to cranberry land. The kids went swimming and we got caught in a bad rain storm that forced us to take cover. Then we headed for Cape Cod and the beaches. By the time we found a place to spend the night we were tired and sleepy." Paul remembers the visit to Bunker Hill this way: "At Bunker Hill there were several flights of steps coming down the hill from the monument. At the side of the steps was a wide concrete slope. On the way down, Carmen and I carefully began to slide down on our feet. Naturally, John Jr. and Steve decided that anything the younger siblings could do, they could do faster and further. After a flying start, John and Steve went head over heels for the last 15 feet of the hill, piling up in a heap on the concrete at the bottom. Both

70
Three Score and Ten in Retrospect
Jackson (President of the New England Mission) who invited us to dinner after church. After a good shower we went to another Howard Johnson to eat, then drove around through the most mixed up and crooked streets imaginable. To bed late - the elevator man said it was 98 degrees hot!" Sunday. July 21st: "We went to church at the Cambridge Branch. They have a lovely new building across the street from Longfellow's home. We got so interested in visiting with Junius Jackson that the men missed priesthood. John and I sat on the stand during Sunday School and were introduced. There was a big crowd. We knew several. We went to the mission home for a lovely dinner after church. We had a good visit with the Jacksons and missionaries (16 people there). (Note: One of the missionaries at dinner was George Pingree, Second Counselor of the mission, who later became Carmen's brother-in-law.) The kids loved it. John Bierer (Chairman of the National Cub Scouting Committee whom we had entertained in Salt Lake) took us to Harvard campus, museums (glass flowers), etc., then to Gloucester, a fishing village on the north shore. We had a wonderful day ." Monday, July 22nd: "We took our own personally conducted tour of Boston: Bunker Hill Monument, Paul Revere's home, the State House, the Old North Church (beautiful), and got tied up in traffic. We went on to Plymouth where we saw Plymouth Rock, the original Massasoit statue (copy in front of Utah State Capitol), the cranberry bogs, and took train to cranberry land. The kids went swimming and we got caught in a bad rain storm that forced us to take cover. Then we headed for Cape Cod and the beaches. By the time we found a place to spend the night we were tired and sleepy." Paul remembers the visit to Bunker Hill this way: "At Bunker Hill there were several flights of steps coming down the hill from the monument. At the side of the steps was a wide concrete slope. On the way down, Carmen and I carefully began to slide down on our feet. Naturally, John Jr. and Steve decided that anything the younger siblings could do, they could do faster and further. After a flying start, John and Steve went head over heels for the last 15 feet of the hill, piling up in a heap on the concrete at the bottom. Both